| | Judas Priest Stained Class CD Judas Priest Discography of CDs
(14 Customer Reviews)
;2 Bonus Tracks,One Studio,One Live
Personnel: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Dave Holland (drums). All tracks have been digitally remastered. Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glen Tipton (guitar, background vocals); K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Les Binks (drums). Producers: Dennis MacKay, James Guthrie, Judas Priest. Engineers include: Neil Ross, Ken Thomas, Paul Northfield. Principally recorded at Chipping Norton Studios, Cotswold, England in 1978. Includes liner notes by Judas Priest. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Personnel: Glenn Tipton (vocals, guitar); K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass guitar); Les Binks (drums). Audio Remasterer: Jon Astley. Recording information: Advision Studios, London, England (1978); Chipping Norton Studios (1978); Trident Studios, London, England (1978); Utopia Studios (1978). Easily one of the most important heavy metal albums ever released, Stained Class marks the peak of Judas Priest's influence, setting the sonic template for the New Wave of British Heavy Metal more than any other single recording. This is the point where Priest put it all together, embracing their identity as the heaviest band on the planet and taking the genre to new heights of power, speed, musicality, and malevolence. Not until Painkiller would the band again be this single-minded in its focus on pure heavy metal. Their blues-rock roots have been virtually obliterated; largely gone, too, are the softer textures and gothic ballads of albums past. The lone exception is the morbid masterpiece "Beyond the Realms of Death," on which the band finally finds a way to integrate the depressive balladry of songs like "Epitaph" and "Last Rose of Summer" into their metal side. Starting out with quiet, mournful verses, the song's chorus is ripped open by a blazing guitar riff as Rob Halford shrieks about leaving the world behind, a dramatic climax that sounds like a definite blueprint for Metallica's "Fade to Black." Yet it wasn't this song that inspired the ridiculous 1989-1990 court case involving the suicide pact of two Nevada teenagers; that honor goes to the Spooky Tooth cover "Better by You, Better Than Me" (penned by none other than the "Dream Weaver" himself, Gary Wright), on which the band allegedly embedded the subliminal backwards-recorded message "Do it." Astounding implausibility aside (as the band pointed out, why encourage the suicides of fans who spend money?), it isn't hard to see why Stained Class might invite such hysterical projections. On balance, it's the darkest lyrical work of the band's career, thematically obsessed with death, violence, and conquest. That's not to say it's always approving. Sure, there are battle cries like "White Heat, Red Hot," horrific nightmares like "Saints in Hell," and elements of the fantastic in the alien monsters of "Invader" and stone classic opener "Exciter." But the band stays philosophical just as often as not. The twisting, turning title track adopts the biblical view of man as a hopeless, fallen creature preyed upon by his baser instincts; "Savage" foreshadows Iron Maiden's "Run to the Hills" in depicting violent colonizers as the real savages; and closer "Heroes End" laments the many legends born from untimely deaths. So in the end, what really cements the celebrated morbidity of Stained Class is the sinister atmosphere created by the music itself. Never before had heavy metal sounded so viciously aggressive, and never before had that been combined with such impeccable chops. Seemingly at will, Tipton and Downing spit out brilliant riffs that cut with knife-like precision, usually several per song. This means that there's a lot to take in on Stained Class, but if there's nothing here as immediate as the band's later hits, there's also a tremendous amount that reveals itself only with repeated listens. While the album's overall complexity is unrivalled in the band's catalog, the s Judas Priest Stained Class Songs Stained Class Music Review Average Rating: (4.6 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews One of the best "classical" of metal Until today whem Rob Halford sing Stained Class I feel the same sensation them the god of metal days...My ressurrection was in the Rock in Rio 3 Submitted by a reviewer (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
All Hail the Metal Gods! Stained Class is Judas Priest at the top of their game. Far and away my favorite Priest recording. Just something about this record makes you need to listen to it again and again and again. Rob Halford IS the Metal God and he proves it with this album... often immitated but NEVER duplicated.
GET THIS ALBUM! Submitted by Joe (Indianapolis, Indiana USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
the real reason priest stands tall. stand back! because priest is here!. exiter is the fastest 70's tune next to speed king or fire ball or stone cold crazy or never say die. very ahead of it's time even in 1978!. beyond the realms of death is deep, dark and heavy. on the bonus side of the album there is a track called fire burns below. man all the bonus songs sound like turbo outtakes!. halford is in top form as well as k.k. and glen and the bass player and the tippy bang drumming of les binks. if you like mainstream priest you will be shocked. warning: not for teenyboppers. only metalheads. Submitted by davidandino83 (chicago) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
What Can Be Better This album really epitomizes the classic Metal music that is Judas Priest by far one of the best albums of it's time I reall enjoyed this one wore it out on my record player went out and got another one all the songs very masterfully done I enjoyed playin some of thier songs with my band at the little clubs here in my home town when I was a kid find this cd and buy it you'll be glad you did Submitted by Metal Warrior (Hugoton Kansas) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
White Heat Without a doubt, Judas Priest's BEST album (althugh "Hell Bent..." and "Unleashed..." are up there too). It was so far ahead of it's time that I don't think very many efer caught up to it. The title track and "Exciter" have been mentioned, but a cursory glance at the other reviews shows a MAJOR omission: "White Heat, Red Hot" I think that the cover is an apt descriptor of how one feels after hearing this album, ugh, I mean, cd. Geez, just thinking about "White Heat, Red Hot" is going to force me to go play it on my guitar! Submitted by Schenker Fan (USA, baby) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Stained Class CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Judas Priest Defenders Of The Faith CD (1983)
Stained Class
$7.59 ;2 New Bonus Tracks
Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Dave Holland (drums). Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. The last quality album from Judas Priest's commercial period, Defenders of the Faith doesn't quite reach the heights of British Steel or Screaming for Vengeance, in part because it lacks a standout single on the level of those two records' best material. That said, ...
| | Judas Priest Point Of Entry CD (1981)
Stained Class
$7.59 Also available in a 3-pack with BRITISH STEEL and SCREAMING FOR VENGEANCE. Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Dave Holland (drums). Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Judas Priest: Dave Holland , Glenn Tipton, Ian Hill, K.K. Downing, Rob Halford. Personnel: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); ...
| | Judas Priest Hell Bent For Leather CD (1979)
Stained Class
$6.75 The British version of this release is titled KILLING MACHINE. Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Les Binks (drums). Principally recorded at Utopia, Basing Street and CBS Studios, London, England in 1978. Includes liner notes by Judas Priest. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Personnel: Glenn Tipton (guitar); Ian ...
| | Judas Priest Unleashed In The East CD (1979)
Stained Class
$6.89 Live In Japan W/ 2 Bonus Tracks.
Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Les Binks (drums). Principally recorded live at Koseinenkin Hall and Nakano Sunplaza Hall, Tokyo, Japan in 1979. Includes liner notes by Judas Priest. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Personnel: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass guitar); Les Binks ...
| | Judas Priest Sin After Sin CD (1977)
Stained Class
$6.75 ;2 Bonus Track,One Studio,One Live
Judas Priest: Robert Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass). Additional personnel: Simon Phillips (drums, percussion). Princiipally ...
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